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UK Travel ETA Requirement in 2026 (it's £20 starting April 8th, 2026, up from £16)

UK Travel ETA Requirement in 2026 (it's £20 starting April 8th, 2026, up from £16)

UK Travel ETA Requirement – How to Apply for Your UK Travel Authorization Planning a trip to the United Kingdom? If you're a visitor from a visa-exempt country, you may need a travel authorization called a UK Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA)....

Safety Guide for Travelers in the United States

Safety Guide for Travelers in the United States

General Safety The United States is generally safe for tourists, but like any country, it's important to stay aware of your surroundings and take standard precautions. Emergency Numbers Dial 911 for all emergencies (police, fire, ambulance). Thi...

Jordan: Petra, Wadi Rum, and Why This Middle Eastern Kingdom Surprises Every Visitor

Jordan: Petra, Wadi Rum, and Why This Middle Eastern Kingdom Surprises Every Visitor

Jordan is the Middle Eastern country most Western travellers approach with the least expectation and leave with the most enthusiasm. It is small (roughly the size of Indiana), almost entirely desert, with very few natural resources — and it contains ...

Why Do Chinese People Travel to Lesotho? The Surprising Answer

Why Do Chinese People Travel to Lesotho? The Surprising Answer

When people ask why Chinese nationals travel to Lesotho, the assumed answer is usually tourism — and then the follow-up question is an incredulous "but why Lesotho?" A tiny, landlocked mountain kingdom completely surrounded by South Africa, with a po...

Crazy Cat Nation: How Many Cats Are in the US — and Which State Has the Most?

Crazy Cat Nation: How Many Cats Are in the US — and Which State Has the Most?

Americans love their cats — and the numbers prove it. According to the American Pet Products Association (APPA), approximately 45.3 million American households own at least one cat, with an estimated 73 to 96 million pet cats living in homes across t...

Iran Visa for Americans: The Complete Step-by-Step Guide to Getting In (It's Harder Than You Think)

Iran Visa for Americans: The Complete Step-by-Step Guide to Getting In (It's Harder Than You Think)

Let's be direct: getting an Iran visa as an American is the most difficult of almost any country in the world. While it's not impossible, the process is significantly more complex for Americans. Here's exactly how it works. Travel Advisory from US...

Is Algeria Safe for American Travelers in 2026?

Is Algeria Safe for American Travelers in 2026?

Many people associate Algeria with the civil conflict of the 1990s called the "Black Decade" or Algerian Civil War but that era is over. But, modern Algeria, while not without challenges, is safer than its reputation would suggest. Current US Sta...

Algeria Visa Guide for Americans: Requirements, Process, and What to Expect in 2026

Algeria Visa Guide for Americans: Requirements, Process, and What to Expect in 2026

Unlike much of North Africa, Algeria does not offer visa-free or visa-on-arrival entry for American citizens. You must obtain a visa from an Algerian embassy or consulate before you travel to explore or en route to another destination. The process re...

Business Travel Guide to Morocco: Meetings, Etiquette, and Getting Around

Business Travel Guide to Morocco: Meetings, Etiquette, and Getting Around

Morocco is a compelling destination for business travel — a modern, connected economy with a sophisticated hospitality infrastructure. But it helps to understand the local business culture before you land. Here's a practical guide for anyone travelin...

Is Uganda Good for Tourists? Honestly, Yes — Here's What to Expect

Is Uganda Good for Tourists? Honestly, Yes — Here's What to Expect

Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda When most people think of East African safaris, they think of Kenya or Tanzania. Those are fantastic countries — but they are not Uganda. Uganda is different. It is greener, wilder, less touristy, and of...

Everyone Loves Americans — They Just Can't Stand Our Government: How the World Really Sees Us

Everyone Loves Americans — They Just Can't Stand Our Government: How the World Really Sees Us

If you have spent any time traveling outside the United States, you have probably noticed something interesting. People will tell you — sometimes to your face, always politely, occasionally with a beer in hand — that they love Americans but canno...

Doing Business in Singapore: The World's Most Business-Friendly Country Explained

Doing Business in Singapore: The World's Most Business-Friendly Country Explained

Singapore is one of the most remarkable economic stories of the modern era. In fewer than 60 years, this island city-state transformed itself from a colonial backwater with no natural resources into one of the wealthiest, most competitive economie...

Antigua and Barbuda: What Is Actually There (And Why It's Worth Going)

Antigua and Barbuda: What Is Actually There (And Why It's Worth Going)

Antigua and Barbuda is a two-island nation in the Eastern Caribbean, sitting between the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. It's small — Antigua is about 108 square miles, Barbuda about 62 — but within that size it packs more variety than many...

The Beach Where "Jaws" Was Filmed: Is Martha's Vineyard Worth Visiting Today?

The Beach Where "Jaws" Was Filmed: Is Martha's Vineyard Worth Visiting Today?

In the summer of 1974, Steven Spielberg descended on a small island off the coast of Massachusetts with a mechanical shark and a crew that had no idea they were about to make cinema history. Jaws, released in June 1975, became the first blockbust...

Where Is the Biggest Library in the World? (And Can You Visit It?)

Where Is the Biggest Library in the World? (And Can You Visit It?)

The largest library on Earth is the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., United States. It holds more than 170 million items — books, recordings, photographs, maps, sheet music, and manuscripts — spread across 838 miles of bookshelves. That's rou...

Canada Travel Guide 2026: The World's Second Largest Country and What Most People Get Completely Wrong About It

Canada Travel Guide 2026: The World's Second Largest Country and What Most People Get Completely Wrong About It

Canada is the second largest country in the world by area — 9.98 million km², slightly larger than the entire continent of Europe — and has a population of approximately 40 million people. That ratio of land to people produces a country where 90% of ...

Connecticut for Business: Why America's Wealthiest State Per Capita Is a Serious Contender for Your Company

Connecticut for Business: Why America's Wealthiest State Per Capita Is a Serious Contender for Your Company

Connecticut is the third smallest US state by area and, measured by median household income and GDP per capita, historically one of the wealthiest. It sits between New York City and Boston, a geography that has always defined what it is: a sophistica...

Portugal's Oldest Places: A Guide to the Ancient Sites Every Visitor Should See

Portugal's Oldest Places: A Guide to the Ancient Sites Every Visitor Should See

Portugal is one of the oldest nation-states in Europe — its borders have remained essentially unchanged since 1139 AD — and its physical landscape tells a much longer story. Here are the ancient and historic sites that every visitor seriously interes...

Hungary Travel Guide: Hot Springs, Ruin Bars, Paprika, and the Most Underrated Capital in Europe

Hungary Travel Guide: Hot Springs, Ruin Bars, Paprika, and the Most Underrated Capital in Europe

Hungary sits in the Carpathian Basin at the geographic heart of Europe, bordered by Austria, Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia. It is a landlocked country of 10 million people with a language related to nothing else in Europe,...

Little Sweden in America: The 5 Most Fascinating Swedish Enclaves You've Never Visited

Little Sweden in America: The 5 Most Fascinating Swedish Enclaves You've Never Visited

Between 1850 and 1920, over 1.3 million Swedes emigrated to the United States — at one point representing the third-largest immigrant group after Germans and Irish. They settled predominantly in the Upper Midwest (Minnesota, Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa...

The World's Most Accessible Country for Blind and Visually Impaired Travelers: Why Japan Leads

The World's Most Accessible Country for Blind and Visually Impaired Travelers: Why Japan Leads

Japan is by virtually every measure the most comprehensively designed country in the world for blind and visually impaired navigation. What makes this particularly remarkable is that the infrastructure is not a recent accessibility retrofit — it is a...

America's Most Mysterious Places: From Sedona Vortexes to Skinwalker Ranch

America's Most Mysterious Places: From Sedona Vortexes to Skinwalker Ranch

The United States is a young country built on ancient geology, indigenous spiritual traditions, frontier mythology, and a national character that has always been captivated by the unknown. The result is a remarkable inventory of places that generate ...

Where Americans Loved to Travel in the 1960s

Where Americans Loved to Travel in the 1960s

The 1960s were the golden age of American travel. The Interstate Highway System was brand new. Jet passenger service had just become mainstream. America was prosperous, optimistic, and eager to explore. Here's where people actually went — and why it ...

Sana'a: Capital of Yemen, Cradle of One of the World's Oldest Cities

Sana'a: Capital of Yemen, Cradle of One of the World's Oldest Cities

At an elevation of 2,300 metres above sea level and with a recorded history stretching back over two and a half millennia, Sana'a is among the most remarkable capital cities in the world. It is the capital of Yemen — a country that sits at the southw...

Canal Street: The Grand Thoroughfare of New Orleans in the 1900s

Canal Street: The Grand Thoroughfare of New Orleans in the 1900s

Canal Street at the turn of the 20th century was one of the most impressive commercial boulevards in the United States. At 171 feet wide — one of the widest streets in the country, a width that required two sets of streetcar rails and still left room...

Where Do Germans Travel in 2025? The Statistics, Trends, and Top Destinations

Where Do Germans Travel in 2025? The Statistics, Trends, and Top Destinations

Germany is a nation of travelers. With a strong passport, generous vacation entitlements, and one of Europe's highest standards of living, Germans collectively take hundreds of millions of trips per year — and the destinations they choose, the amount...

Bihar, India: The Birthplace of Buddhism and One of the Most Overlooked States in Asia

Bihar, India: The Birthplace of Buddhism and One of the Most Overlooked States in Asia

Most people could not find Bihar on a map. This is a significant oversight in world cultural geography, because Bihar is where some of the most important events in Asian and world history took place — and where the physical traces of those events can...

Japan Beyond Tokyo: The Places That Ruin Every Country That Comes After

Japan Beyond Tokyo: The Places That Ruin Every Country That Comes After

The famous Japan loop — Tokyo, Hakone, Kyoto, Nara, Osaka — is famous for a reason. It's extraordinary. But Japan is the kind of country where every corner you don't reach on the first trip becomes the reason for the second one. Here are the places t...

Which US State Has the Best Indian Food? An Honest Breakdown

Which US State Has the Best Indian Food? An Honest Breakdown

Indian food is among the world's most complex, regional, and deeply spiced cuisines. In the United States, it's also one of the most unevenly distributed. Depending on where you live, "Indian food" might mean an extraordinary 40-item menu drawing fro...

How Long Would It Take to Walk Every US State? (And Who Has Actually Done It)

How Long Would It Take to Walk Every US State? (And Who Has Actually Done It)

The continental United States is roughly 2,800 miles wide and 1,600 miles tall. Walking it — really crossing every state on foot — is one of those challenges that sounds like a thought experiment but has, in fact, been done. Several times. By people ...